ARE YOU BORED YET? - part three
18+ â MINORS DNI
pairing: eddie munson x fem!reader
summary: you're steve's "bitchy" step-sister and are spending the summer in hawkins; eddie is steve's annoying best friend who you can't seem to shake, but things take a sharp turn when you find yourself sneaking around and ultimately falling for him
contains: slightly enemies to lovers trope, food/eating, drug use and mentions of alcohol, smoking, secret relationship vibes, lots of tension, tons of kissing, flirting, oral (f receiving), mentions of virginity, a hint of blasphemy, a sprinkle of angst, and eddie being an obsessed loverboy <3
word count: 16.3k (i sincerely apologize)
chapter song: hold me x fleetwood mac
| previous part I next part |
I series masterlist | their mixtape | -main masterlist- I
Cigarettes, artificial sugar, smoky cinnamon, light on your tongue and heavy on your kneesâ Eddie Munson tastes like a cool summer night on melted ice.
His lips are soft, pillowy, warm, and addictive. You get lost in them quickly, falling down an endless spiral of Eddie, Eddie, Eddie.
Truthfully, you had been the one to jump.
And now youâre falling, quicker and longer than you had thought you would.
And nothing below you looks soft. Nothing is there to break your fall.
But Eddie feels good.
He feels good against your tongue, wet and hot and greedyâ beneath your fingertips, warm, soft, and firm.Â
Kissing Eddie feels like walking through a vortex tunnel.
There are colors exploding around you, shaky grounds beneath your feet, the promising end glimmering ahead of youâ and you know your dizziness will end once you step out of it, but you donât want it to end. The uncertainty of steady knees forces you to hold onto whatâs there, hope, and pray you donât fall on your ass. Blink and watch the world spin around youâ Eddie takes every breath you give, hungry and needy.
He presses you against his van, cool metal against the slivers of bare skin, watery whimpers splashing onto his tongue.
God, you canât breathe.
Your heart is thrumming in your chest, hot and heavy, fingers swelling up with blood as they curl into Eddieâs shirt. His fingers press against your waist, firm, grounding and steady, but youâre anything but steady.
What are you doing?
Your breath catches. The warmth, the weight, the sheer intensity of whatâs happening slams into you all at once.
Eddie licks into you, tilts his head and kisses you deeper. You let him. You feed him back, kiss him harder, pull him closer. The thrumming noise of a summer night is drowned by the rushing of blood in your ears. You can feel his breath on your lip and hear your bated breathing.
His fingers trail over your sides, shivers splintering up your back as he cups your face. You lean into it, just a little, and let yourself melt into him for a moment before reality grasps you tight and mercilessly.Â
Shit. Shit, shit, shit.
What are you doing?
It settles in your gut like hot stones, thick coats of wool wrapping around your tongue as you make a pathetic noise.
How did you end up here? Alone? With him?
Your grip on him loosens. The blood turns murky in your veins. The storm of uncertainty and confusion crashes over you like a tidal wave.
Eddie feels it before you can even pull back, you know he can. Your body stiffens, a sharp inhale between kisses, and youâre gone.
Nothing to break your fall.
You pull away from him, wet mouth already tainted with him, tongue already familiar with his tasteâ too late to go back.Â
Thereâs barely a whisper of space between you, but it feels like miles. Your world pans out, and youâre staring at Eddie, watching him witness your descent.
Your hands fall from his body, trembling and clenching once, twice.
Eddie doesnât move. Doesnât speak. Watches you like heâs studying you, trying to pick you apart.
Horror.
It drags through you like a snake.Â
What did you do? What door has just opened, and how do you close it before itâs too late?
His eyes shift, something dark behind the curtain of golden earth youâve started to dream about.Â
Itâs brief, a flicker, a small flash across your face, but he sees it. That wide-eyed, gut-punched, what have I done? look. His face settles with a look that makes your insides churn.
The air shifts. The warmth drains. And the moment is over.
Eddie swallows, your breaths still uneven, his lips wet as he drags his tongue over them, tasting you.
Fuck, you can taste him too. So clearly. Like youâve split an orange over your mouth, drained it of its juice, let the acid burn you from the inside out.
You take a breath, shifting, memorizing the feeling of his hands on your waist when you speak, âCan youââ you clear your throat, ââI need to get homeâŠâ
Silence. Heavy. Overwhelmingâ It settles over you, the sound of cicadas in the trees plays like a symphony to the wind of thoughts in your mind.Â
Eddie stares for a long beat, like heâs waiting for you to take it back. Like he can see right through you. Like heâs hoping. But you donât.
He nods. Sniffs, wipes a thumb across his nose to distract himself from the storm, eyes glancing away as he kicks at the dirt.
âYeah⊠yeah, okay,â his jaw flexes, and he steps back, rings clinking against the metal door when he holds it open for you again.
This time, you donât look at him, and you donât dare to touch him.
The van is deadly silent.Â
A sharp contrast to the vibrant atmosphere you had carefully curated throughout the night. Most times you have been around Eddie, heâs a fountain of nonstop noise. Heâs constantly saying or doing somethingâ and the times that heâs not, itâs usually because heâs just being an ass.
But Eddieâs silence tonight isnât a part of some joke he has. No, Eddieâs silence is just that. Silence. And itâs unnerving.
You donât know what to say.
And this time, itâs not because youâre scared or have nothing to say to Eddie. This time, itâs because nothing you say or do can erase what you didnât say or do.
You did the complete opposite of what you know, truly, deep down in your chest, you wanted to do. Instead of pulling Eddie closer, pressing your lips to his again and telling him he tasted like shitty cotton candy and smoke, you pulled away and acted like heâd spit poison in your mouth.
You curled away from him, retreated into whatever stupid little hole youâd dug for yourself, and resumed your facade of âdonât speak, never happenedâ.
But this happened.
You kissed Eddie.
And no amount of silence can deafen the buzzing ghost of his lips on yours.Â
Your hands rest in your lap, fingers picking at the skin around your nails as you avoid looking over at Eddie, scared heâll be looking. But of course he isnât. Because heâs driving, eyes locked on the road ahead, one hand gripping the wheel, the other clenched against his thigh.Â
His rings catch an occasional flash beneath passing streetlights. Just minutes ago, they had cooled your hot skin and played like an anchor to your dizzying mind. Youâd thought they were cool, so incredibly and undeniably him. Now, they just look like armor.Â
The weight of the night fogs the air like smoke that wonât clear.
You wish there were noise. A cracked window to hear the wheels or Eddieâs usual loud musicâ but thereâs nothing but the silent hum of the van beneath you.Â
You debate asking for a songâ anything to kill the silence. But you think itâd do more damage than good. Like cheating. Like throwing a rug over the bloodstain.
You glance at Eddie again, dragging in a breath, words dancing on your tongue before you exhale, silent, letting it go unsaid.Â
You wish heâd say something. Anything. You wish he would just⊠be Eddie.
Call you some stupid pet name, say youâre dumb, make fun of you for running from a kiss. You nearly want to beg for it.
But heâs done being Eddie tonight.
He gave you Eddie, and you took it, chewed it to bits, and spat it right back in his face.
Now, heâs just a boy, driving you back home, holding pieces of something you almost gave him. And you feel it in the way he wonât look at you.
Heâs close to your neighborhood, worn-out tires pulling you closer and closer to the end of what couldâve been a perfect night.Â
You hate to break the silence, hate that you have even to say the words bubbling in you, but you know itâs for your own goodâ both you and Eddieâs.Â
âCould you maybe⊠drop me off a block away?âŠâ
You glance at him, notice the clench in his jaw, the way he rolls a shoulder, seemingly decompressing himself. âSure.â
Itâs short. Clipped. Not the usual teasing lilt Eddie carries when he addresses you.Â
You take it anywayâ grovel with it.
You donât try again. Youâre not one to beg, and you have no reason to plead for his forgivenessâ your hesitation about whatever this is was not ill-natured. He knows that. You know that.Â
You think he knew it before you did.Â
He turns into your neighborhood, takes a few turns, and gets you as close as possible before he rolls to a stop, just below a streetlight.Â
He doesnât turn the car off, the soft hum of the van filling in the silence. He doesnât move. Doesnât make a sound or do anything to indicate the end of the night. But you know it is either way.
You donât unbuckle right away. Your fingers fidget with the strap, teeth chewing at the fleshy part of your lip. Your heart is loud in your chest, begging you just to open your mouth and say something, but all the words taste like cotton.Â
You look at him.
He still wonât look at you.
And when you think he wonât speak, he swipes a thumb across his nose and clears his throat, voice low and hoarse, âUh⊠get home safe.â
Not what you wanted to hear, but better than nothing.
You nod. A ghost of a movement, a thank you caught in your throat.Â
And then the belt clicks when you unbuckle, your fingers curling around the handle to gently open the door as if anything more will shatter you into something worse.
You step into the cool breeze, the silent summer wrapping around you again, this time not as comforting as before.Â
You hesitate for a moment. Hope heâll say something, your name, anything. But he doesnât.Â
So, you take his silence, close the door, and turn around. Back to your home, back to your room where youâll toss around in bed and think about tonight until it eats you alive.Â
You walk, silent sounds of nature enveloping you with each step you take. You can still feel him everywhere around you. Your lips still tingle, your hips still burn.Â
God, what did you do?
You donât dare to glance back because you can hear Eddieâs van still running. Sitting there, watching as you walk down the street, his protection being the loudest thing heâs said since that kiss.
Finally, when you reach the end of the block, the van rumbles back into motion and disappears down the street, taking with it a version of the night that couldâve ended differently.
The house is quiet when you eventually slip inside.Â
The lights are off, a soft glow of the moon peeking through the windows as you sneak your way up to your room. You pass by Steveâs room, wonder if heâs awake, wonder if he could sense his friendâs presence practically drenched over you. Your stomach twists at the thought.Â
Heâd chew you to bits if he ever found out. Tell you that youâre being selfish. That you know summer will come to an end.Â
You walk past his door, straight to your room, not bothering to turn the lights on.Â
Your clothes feel like an echo of the night, a reminder of what youâd tasted. What youâd felt. Who you tasted. Who you felt.
You peel them off slowly, tired from your day, but hoping that, maybe, if you move gently enough, the regret wonât sting as much.
You drop onto your bed, the spin of the ceiling fan painting a vivid image of what your stomach feels like.
You kissed him.
And then you left him.
Your fingers dance across your stomach and ribs, clasping around the small necklace on your chest. You twirl the small pendant between your fingers, replaying the night over and over in your mind, trying to figure out how it couldâve gone differently.
But it never changes.
It ends the same, with him driving away and you walking in the dark.Â
Eddie makes it halfway home before he pulls over.
The road is empty, the van ticks and cools as it idles under a broken billboard, and Eddieâs mind is a whirlwind.
His body is still buzzing, still high from the good parts of the night, but the way itâs clashing with his mind as it plummets to that dark space heâs uncomfortably familiar withâ it makes him feel like an exposed nerve.
You kissed him.
And then you ran.Â
And Eddie doesnât know what the hell to make of that. Doesnât know if that means something, or if it meant too much, and thatâs why you shut down. Maybe he pushed too hard, too quicklyâ it wouldnât be the first time heâs done that. Because itâs not like he hasnât been here beforeâ people pulling back once they realize heâs not worth the mess.
Still, it felt different. You felt different.
Until you didnât.
No. She still does. She is different.Â
He wrestles with his thoughts for a moment. Hates that heâs always quick to want a final word, a solution, something. Heâs not patient. Never has been. And his mind spins like a fucking metal sphere in a pinball machineâ Eddieâs not cut out for this. He gives and gives and gives, and when heâs inevitably left wondering why no one will take it, he spins out.
âGet home safe.â
The most pathetic thing he could come up with. He shouldâve said more. Shouldâve said, Hey, I liked that. I wanted more of that. I wanted you.
But he didnât.
Because you didnât.Â
And because heâs a coward.
He leans back against his seat and sparks up a cigarette before peeling back onto the road.
It doesnât matter. You made your choice, and Eddie will respect it, even though he thinks it is stupid.
No matter how badly he wants to turn around and go back to you. No matter how badly he wants to shake you and yell out, This is okay. This is goodâ weâre good.
Kiss me again and stop fighting this.
Be good with me.
A week passes with a long stretch of silence between you and Eddie.
Not the comfortable kind. Not the lazy, late-summer kind that curls around you like a cozy blanket. Not the kind thatâs mutual in a sense where you both know once youâre face-to-face again, itâll be like zero time has passed. No, this one crackles. Burns. It hums, like static, loud and noisy in your ears, itchy beneath your skinâ because all you can do is relive that kissâ over and overâ like itâs stuck on a loop. Trapped behind your ribs like a lingering cold, refusing to let go.
And itâs not the good part that clings. Not the taste of cotton candy and cigarettes, or the warm, roughened fingertips on your skin. No, what clings is what you did afterâ you ran.
No explanation, no call, nothing. And every day that passes just makes you feel worse.Â
That plummeting look in Eddieâs eyes when you caved into yourselfâ it follows you in every dream. Itâs worse than guilt. Itâs a tetherâ a burn.
The silence sticks to you in every roomâ on your skin, behind your eyes, between every thoughtâ and in the quiet moments you find, it grows deafeningly loud.
You do things to distract yourself. Rearrange your room. Color-code your closet. Plan for the next school semester, even though your schedule is already solidified. Run useless errands with your stepmother, feign interest in countertop samples and paint swatches, just to keep your mind busy.Â
But none of it works.
Because Eddieâs there.
In every passing car with loud music, in every corner of a room that feels too hot, too still.
Heâs folded into the silence and the noise, in the little breath you take between words and the way your stomach clenches when you let your mind drift.
Eddieâs thoroughly infiltrated your system whether you like it or notâ and fuck, youâre a fool to say he didnât.
Heâs bright. Searing like the summer sun at its zenith, the kind of heat that saps your strength and leaves you dizzy, thirsty for more.Â
But heâs cold, tooâ ice in the root of your chest when you remember how his face shifted the second you shifted. How quickly his warmth cooled when you didnât stay.
Eddie is everything youâve ever run fromâ loud, frayed, rough, unpredictable in a way that makes your skin buzz.Â
Guys like him were never an option. Too much, too raw, too real. You donât touch things that burn like that. You werenât supposed to.
But now youâve touched him. And itâs already too late.
Youâre singed. Marked in ways you canât see but you feel.Â
You should be thinking about how to let it goâ how to shake it loose, bury it, re-stitch the part of yourself that unraveled in his hands.
But instead, you keep remembering. His hands. The way he looked at you, like he couldnât believe you were real. The way he tastedâ cigarettes, artificial sugar, smokey cinnamonâ a summer storm, and the brightest crack of lightâ Eddie Munson is out to ruin you.
His eyes wanted more. His hands wanted more.Â
And the worst part was, you do too. You donât know what exactly you want from him.Â
But itâs him.Â
Itâs his crooked grin, his smoke-rough laugh, the way he touches you like he knows you better than you know yourself.Â
Itâs the pullâ that stupid, reckless pullâ and the part of you that craves chaos a little more than you ever admitted.Â
You donât know why, you just know you want it. And maybe, deep down, youâre terrified of what that says about you. What it says about the lack of control you thought you had, so carefully crafted all your life.
One kiss from a leather-bound boy and it shattered.Â
It feels like a beginning. One you slammed the door on way too fast.Â
And now? You have no idea if itâs too late to open it again.Â
You want to think heâs fine, that this wasnât some huge thing for him. That heâs used to girls coming and going. That maybe youâre making a bigger deal of it than it was.Â
But then you remember the way he looked at you afterward. Like youâd given him the goddamn moon and snatched it back before he could get a grip on it.
It feels rotten in your gut. A spinning wheel of regret, slow like molasses, scraping at your insides with each turn. You donât know if you crushed something good before it had a chance, and you really donât know how to clarify that.Â
You could just ask him. Call. Show up at the bar on one of the nights he performs. What would you say? Would he even want to talk to you? Or is your cowardly rejection still simmering in his chest the way it is in yours?
Fortunately, and maybe unluckily, youâre not left wondering for long.Â
The answer comes in the form of your father's car. Eddie spent the week fixing it, and now youâve been tasked with picking it up from Eddieâs place.Â
You let it sit for two days. You canât even bring yourself to slip on a pair of shoes to head over to Eddieâs place, because once youâre there, you canât hide anymore.Â
Because what happens when you step into Eddieâs home and youâre slapped with the truth of what your week-long spiral was really all about? What happens if it destroys what was left in your satchel of perseverance? What happens when Eddie looks at you and thereâs no longer that stupid glint dancing in his eyes?
Youâd live on. Obviously. But not without a bruised ego. And maybe a little bit of a growing distaste for cinnamon and sugar.
And you think you hate that.
Steve forces you to go on the third day. If he notices your reluctance, he doesnât mention itâ just impatiently waits in the driveway and curls his nose when you slip into his passenger seatâ ââŠAre you wearing perfume?â
âShut up, Steve, just drive.â
And you try to focus on the drive or the music, anything but Eddie, but your mind lands on him every time you try to flip it. So you give up. Two minutes left anyway. And then youâll be forced to face the man whoâs been haunting your mouth for the past week.Â
Itâs the peak of the day when you find yourself in front of Eddieâs doorâ the time when the sun turns the distance into rippling waves of heat. Steve didnât waste a second to drive off, leaving you behind in a cloud of dust and nerves.
The trailer park is a different kind of solace. Not soft, not sereneâ just stretched. Thereâs a hum beneath your skin, something slow and buzzing, itchy like youâd just walked through a field of tall grass. Everything feels slowed down here, strung out, like the air itself is holding its breath. Or maybe thatâs just you.
The gravel crunches beneath your shoes like itâs daring you to keep going. The road twists and curves around sun-bleached trailers; a box fan lowly hums in the window of one, a dog barking before settling down in the shade of another.Â
You shouldâve worn something else. Sweat beads at the back of your neck, slipping down your spine, and your heartâs beating faster than it should be for a simple car pickup. You tell yourself itâs just the heat, but you know better. Youâre two steps away from the door that makes you want to bolt back to California.
You climb the creaky but sturdy steps, like theyâve been there for years of time and weather. There are scuffs along the door, worn and loved, a sense of a thoroughly used home that oddly stirs your insides. You hesitate for only a second, bite the bullet before you raise a fist and knock twice on the door, sharp and quick.Â
Cicadas hum in the distance, the dog barks, the fan hums. You debate stealing the bike off to the side and high-tailing it home.
You stare at it long enough to imagine it before the door swings open.Â
Eddie. Barefoot. Wet hair with sweats hung low on his hips like he wasnât expecting anybody for the rest of the day. His skin is still dewy from a shower, ink dark and slithering across the expanse of his skin. You swear you donât watch the bead of water that drips from his hair and rolls down the side of his neck but you can damn near feel it.
Eddieâs eyes slightly widen when he sees you, shifting and opening the door more so he can fully see you.Â
âHey.â He plainly says.
You draw in a breath and hold his eyes, âHey.â
A silence simmers, not loud, but there. For a moment, neither of you moves. And now that youâre looking at Eddie again, face-to-face, if you think hard enough, you can remember how his lips feel.
Eddie blinks like he remembers why youâre here, âCarâs out back. Keys are here somewhere.â
He lets you in, holds the door, and lets it swing shut behind you as you enter his home. The air is cool inside, tinged with whatever soap he used and the sharp note of twine from the fan spinning on the ceiling.Â
Eddie walks a few steps ahead, taking a hand through his damp curls as he heads for the kitchen counter. âYou know, uhâŠâ he says without looking back, digging into a catch-all bowl full of keys, change, and mismatched guitar picks, âitâs nice to see youâre, like, alive. Didnât die on the walk home, or something.â
You glance around his trailerâguitar leaning in the corner, a record sleeve half-tucked under the couch, light bleeding golden through the dusty blinds, a shit ton of mugs lined on the shelves with baseball caps lined above them.
âYou watched me.â You remind him.
As you watch him, he pauses for a beat before he shrugs, âI did. And then I drove home thinking, âshould I have popped a mint before I kissed her?ââ
When he turns around, keys in hand, heâs grinningâeyes soft, a little nervous under all that casual. And there he is. Eddie peeking out from behind the boy you left beneath the streetlamp.Â
The tiny voice in your head sings as if heâs risen from the dead.
You take the keys from him, slowly. âYou tasted like cotton candy,â you say, fingers brushing his, âand cigarettes.â
And cinnamon. Sugar-coated wet dreams and the end of summerâ you wonât tell him, youâll let it toss around in your brain like a mantra until youâre sick of it.
Eddie quirks an eyebrow, eyes slightly narrowing in question, âBad combo?â
You hum, clutching the keys as you pull your hand back, âFor some, maybeâŠâ You tip your head, holding his gaze.
Something grows in Eddieâs eyes. Something small yet true.Â
Itâs quiet, then, where nothing really needs to be said, but youâre both aching to say something anyway.Â
You take a silent breath, a calm settling over you that hadnât been there all weekâ something that clarifies you know what you should say.
âIâm sorry,â you murmur. âI didnât⊠I didn't handle it well.â
Eddie straightens with a deep breath and makes a face, playful and easy. âNo worries, princess. Had plenty of hit-and-runs before. Iâm a connoisseur.â
You roll your eyes, even as something in your chest tugs, âIâm trying to be sincere, Eddie.â You deadpan.
The grin on Eddieâs face makes your hands hot. âI know,â he leans in, voice a little lower, like the moment has shifted. âItâs cute.â
He steps back, nods towards the back door with a gaze dancing in his eyes, making your chest thrum, âCâmon, Iâll walk you out. Gotta show off my mechanical skills.â
You follow him out. Try not to eye the expanse of his back through the shirt heâs wearing, try not to remember the way his arms felt beneath your fingers, even though youâd been remembering it since then. His scent wafts behind him like a taunting train of âremember this? Remember how close you were to that?â.Â
It puts you in a daze.
The screen door snaps shut behind you when you step out, the lightâs softened, everything golden, and long shadows.Â
Eddie runs a hand along the hood of your father's car and taps it, âChanged the oil. Transmission put you out on the road, so I fixed that, too. And I tightened your brake lineâ it was loose enough to make me nervous, and Iâm already high-strung as it is.â
âYouâre so modest.â You hum as you walk up to the car.Â
He smirks and shrugs, watching as you approach the driverâs side, âI try.â
You open the door, gazing at him as he props it open for you. A callback to memory, vivid and true.Â
âThanksâŠâ You softly say.
Eddie nods, âDonât mention it.â He glances away, squints at the setting sun, and shifts in his spot, âYou uhâŠâ he pauses and scratches the back of his neck, you tilt your head, âYou ever been to the drive-in? The one out past the fairgrounds?â
You crack a smile, gazing at him as he turns back to you. You tilt your head, the sun gleaming over him. Somewhere in his eyes, thereâs a fairy, swirling the pools of brown and making magic under the sun.
Itâs working. Annoyingly so.
âThe one that shut down like four years ago?â You huff out a laugh.
Eddie smiles, âDid it?â
âDefinitely. Yeah.â
Eddie quirks a brow like heâs questioning your knowledge. You couldâve sworn you saw them breaking the screen down last time you passed it all those years ago. You shift in your spot, leaning against the door, âThis your way of asking me out?â
Eddie grins then, sun peeking out in his cheeks, deep enough to make the beast in your chest purr like sheâs been asleep for years. Whether she hates the sun or craves it, youâre not sure.Â
Eddie shrugs, âJust asking if you wanna sit in a car with me for three hours and make fun of bad dialogue.â he gazes at you for a moment before leaning in, voice low and convincing, âOnce-in-a-lifetime opportunity.â
You look at him, rolling the idea in your mind, tasting it behind your teeth. You hum, fingers twitching against the car door before you speak, âNo. And you said that at the fair.â
Eddieâs smug demeanor falters, disbelief in his voice when he responds, âNo?â
âNo.â
âYou wound me,â he groans, dragging a hand over his face, âIâm a wounded soldier here, honeybee. Bleeding out. Throw me a bone at least.â He dramatically pleads.
You roll your eyes, already turning to get in the car. âIâm romantic as hell, by the way. Iâll bring you flowers and kiss you at the door, the whole nine.â
Itâs cuteâ his marketing skillsâ and maybe if you stayed a little longer, youâll cave. You glance at him, strapping the belt across your torso and holding back the smile in your cheeks as he gazes down at you. You reach for the door and shake your head, âGoodbye, Eddie.â
Eddie looks at you like he always does, with stars in his eyes and his heart on his sleeve, âBye, Malibu.â
You donât ask why heâs still smiling at you like that, and you donât let yourself wonder what it means. You just shut the door and let the warmth in your cheeks settle on the drive home.
He doesnât let up for nearly two weeks.
Eddieâs on a running campaign to get you to agree to this magical drive-in movie date heâs proposed, and heâs relentless about it, too. He keeps his appearances up at the house, wasting away in Steveâs room until he finds a moment to slip away and find you.
The first time he finds you in the kitchen, cutting a bowl of fruit for yourself when he rounds the corner. Heâs got a lovesick grin on his face and a mouth full of smug, flirtatious words waiting to come out at a moment's notice.
âMovieâs still on the table.â He hums, walking around you like an animal taunting its prey.
You donât bother looking at him, slicing through thick blocks of pineapple as you hum, âNo.â
âFree drinks.â He offers.
âStill no.â
The second time he asks comes a day later while youâre lying by the pool, sunglasses perched on your face, a book in your lap. Eddie leans over you, wet hair dripping chlorine and sun, dampening your pages, âName the candy, Iâll get it.â
âEddieââ You grimace, pressing a hand to his chest and shaking your book off with the other. You ignore the warmth beneath your fingertips, glaring up at him through the dark shades as he continues to ramble.
âPopcorn? Gummy worms? Licorice? Gross, but Iâll look the other way. Iâll even let you hold the remote.â
You look at him, deadpanned as he wiggles his eyebrows at you.
âThere is no remote.âÂ
Eddie rolls his eyes and waves a hand, âYouâre missing the point.â
You lift your glasses just enough to give him a look, âGoodnight, Eddie.â
Eddieâs face twists in mild confusion. âItâs three in the afternoon.â
âExactly.â
You lose count of how many times he asks. He gets creative with it, though. Will pass by your room and slip an index card under your door with a single Dum-Dum taped to it and the wordsâ MOVIEâS THIS WEEKEND?â scribbled in shitty handwriting with two check boxes beneath it. Both of the boxes say yes.
You draw a third box, write ânoâ beside it, and check the box before sliding it back under the door.
The Dum-Dum was strawberry flavored and painted your tongue red.
You now have a stash of Dum-Dums piling up on your dresser.
Nothing is holding you back from saying yes to Eddie. Aside from the fact that heâs Eddie, and every time youâre left alone with him for a prolonged amount of time, your brain starts glitching out like a jumbled tape until you start thinking stupid things. Stupid things that land you pressed against his van with his tongue down your throatâ not like youâre still thinking about it or anything.Â
By the start of the second week, Eddieâs purely asking for the bit. He likes the chase, says it all in his grin and the twinkle in his eye every time you shut him down, and he throws a hand over his chest like a lovesick dog.
So by the time he leans against the doorframe of your room and asks again on a random Wednesday night, heâs moving off muscle memory.
âDrive-inâs still on the table. So are the snacks. And the cuddles. Just say the word, Iâll heat up the van and cue up the mood lighting.â
Youâre perched in front of your vanity, smoothing cool moisturizer beneath your eyes, not bothering to look back when you respond, âYou got mood lighting in your van now?â
âPrincess, please,â Eddie scoffs, waltzing in like he knows his way around the place. âIâve had mood lighting. That lava lamp has been through everything with me.â
You snort, and he plops on your bed, splaying out like a cat thatâs getting comfortable, his feet still planted on the ground as he talks to your ceiling, âAnyway, no pressure. Just sayinâ I can get ready in five. Six if you want me to shave.â
You glance at him through the mirror, blink once, and consider that heâs still there, draped over your sheets like a lovelorn teenage boy.Â
âOkay.â
Eddie doesnât move. And honestly, if you looked close enough, you might think he might have stopped breathing.
âUhâŠâ He clears his throat, sitting up with a fist over his mouth as he coughs a few times. âWas thatâ sorryâ that was a yes?â
You suppress the grin that threatens to split across your lips. You close the containers on your vanity and stand, pushing the chair in, âYes. Now get out. Before I change my mind.â
âOh shit, youâre serious? Likeâ like this Saturday?â He asks with wide eyes.
âFriday. And I need to be home by midnight, no later.â You demand.
Eddie nods, like a child getting scolded and trying to regain trust. âMidnight, no later, got it.â
You nod, standing before him, arms crossed over your chest. A silence falls over the room for a moment. You blink once, eyeing Eddie as he sits on your bed, a slow grin spreading across his lips.
âI totally cracked youââ
âGet out.â
âGot it. See you Saturday, Malibu.â
You donât care to wipe off the smile on your face when the door shuts behind him.
You donât tell anyone.Â
Not Mia, not Steveâ not even the bathroom mirror youâve been avoiding all day.Â
You spun a lie at dinner, something short and simple about having a movie night, and when your dad asked who with, you shrugged and said âMia,â like it wasnât a sin. Technically true. Mia exists. You could be with Mia. Youâre just⊠not.Â
Instead, youâre going to be with Eddie. Steveâs friend.
Eight oâclock. Thatâs when youâre meeting him. A block away, under the streetlamp, just like youâd agreed.Â
The house simmers to a quiet state as you get ready. You pace a little, change your outfit twice before going back to the original skirt and top youâd picked out. You apply your lip gloss once, hate the shade, and wipe it off before applying a clear one. You smell an array of perfumes until they all smell the same, and youâre forced to just spray something random, biting your tongue as you repeat to yourself, itâs just a movie. Not a date. Stop acting like this is something because itâs not.
Itâs getting dark when you slip out the back gate, your purse in one hand with your pride in the other, perfume clinging to your skin like a secret. And maybe thatâs what this is. A secret mission. Something stolen and sweet. Something reckless.
Or maybe itâs a mistake.
Somewhere along the way, between the gate and the driveway, your pride slips and falls to the pavement.Â
Just a movie. Not a date. This is nothing.Â
You tell yourself that once more as you walk down the block, holding onto your purse like a lifeline. The air is cooling with leftover heat from the day, a slight breeze that instantly cools it, and reminds you of the season. The sky has dimmed to a navy, the kind of dusk that makes the street lights flicker like theyâre nervous too. You should be nervous.
You are.
But you donât let it show. Because you donât get nervous over boys. Not even boys that kiss you like youâre not breakable. Not even boys that hold your gaze like theyâre daring you to run.
But the closer you get to the street corner, the more your stomach knots. The more you start to second-guess whether this is a good idea, which itâs definitely not. But you keep walking anyway. Like your common sense has just magically disappeared, and youâre moving on a whim.
Because this isnât just a drive-in movie. Itâs another step into a story you didnât plan to write. And planning is how you survive. Lipstick, posture, perfectly-timed smiles, perfectly aligned futureâ armor. That's always been enough.
And then Eddie came. And you donât typically feel sorry for turning away from a boy; you never had to feel sorry. Because none of them has been him. And now you canât stop thinking about the way he looked at you when you said sorry. Like he didnât want to hear it, but needed it anyway. Like heâd been waiting for you to say something real, and now that you had, he didnât know what to do with it.
And it didnât feel like a game.
Thatâs the part thatâs unraveling you. It didnât feel like a win. It felt like a surrender.
You pause before you turn the corner, allow yourself one more moment of quiet nerves as you breathe, smooth your sweaty hands over your skirt, and crack a smirk that doesnât quite reach your eyes.Â
And then you walk.
You can already hear Eddieâs music booming from the radio of his van, and it does little to ease your nerves. Because, of course. Of course, Eddie Munson announces his arrival to the entire neighborhood.Â
As you get closer, you spot him near the van, leaning against the passenger door like heâs posed for some photo he doesnât know about. His jeans are cuffed, scuffed boots toeing the gravel with a cigarette smoldering between his fingers. The faintest smirk tugs at his lips when he sees you. Something in you settles.
âHey, runaway,â he calls out, flicking the cigarette to the curb and grinding it beneath his heel, âNice of you to show.â
âI had to slip out past Steve and a dad who breathes like a dragon,â you say, lifting a brow as you approach, arms crossed. âYou, meanwhile, are trying to alert the entire neighborhood with this volume. Jesus, Munson.â
Eddie grins, wide and unapologetic, as he swings the passenger door open with a dramatic flourish. âApologies, princess. Good habit. Makes for a great entrance.â
You hum as you climb into the passenger seat, the scent of smoke and old leather filling your nose, âIâll give it a five out of ten.â
Eddie makes a wounded expression, âHarshâ and rudeâ rough way to start the night, honeybee.â
You halfheartedly shrug as he closes the door and jogs to the driver's seat. Another moment of quiet nerves. And then he slips in, âIâll change it for you. Just say the word. I donât change it for many people, so take that shit seriously.â
You smirk, watching as he turns the key in the ignition, âA sacred honor?â
âAn elite one,â he solemnly nods, âMost people? They get Motörhead or nothing. But for you, honeybee?â He looks at you and cracks a stupid, heartfelt look, âIâd play Madonna for you.â
You glare at him, fighting the smile on your lips as you roll your eyes, âAlright, loverboy,â you nod towards the road, âstart driving. Youâre burning up your cool points every time you talk.â
Eddie scoffs and waves you off, peeling the van onto the road with a shake of his head, âRude. Again. Shouldnât have fixed your car.âÂ
You canât help the laugh that rolls off your lips.
You drive in silence for a moment. The city is asleep, everyone home with their families, tucking their kids in for a nightâs sleep. Every light is green, the sun still dropping, flickering through the line of trees along the winding backroads. Fields roll out beside them like a running scene to match the radio as it swiftly shifts into the next song. This one is slower. Something you doubt Eddie listens to in his free time.
You glance at him, the way the light hits his jaw, his fingers tapping to the rhythm. You crack, âFine. You get, like⊠maybe a point for the mixtape.â
Eddie smirks without looking, like he knew it was coming, âA point? Out of?â
âFive.â
Eddie scoffs out a laugh, âTough grader.â
You shrug, shifting in your seat, eyes drifting back to the road, âEarn the rest.â
Eddie glances at you, tilts his head back and forth like heâs thinking before he speaks, âWhat if I bought you gummy worms?â
You turn back to him, âDo you have gummy worms?â You ask in a faux uninterested tone.
Eddieâs teeth dig into his bottom lip as he reaches blindly toward the backseat. He shuffles around momentarily, eyes never leaving the road, one hand on the wheel. You watch in amusement as he pulls out a crinkled gas station bag, holding it up like a trophy. âI come prepared.â
You pause, eyes narrowing in suspicion, âHow long have those been back there?â
âLike a day.â He shrugs. You raise a brow, and he rolls his eyes. âMaybe three. Theyâre still good. Little stiff. Builds jaw strengthâ yâknow artificial sugar never rots, inspector.â
âRots your teeth.â
Eddie smiles, âSo do you. Sweet as honey. Iâm still digginâ in.â
You shake your head, glancing away as a smile cracks across your lips, so wide you nearly feel embarrassed. You sigh, leaning back into the seat, âIâm not chewing stale gummy worms just to impress you.â
âFine,â he rips the bag open with his teeth, âMore for me.â He pops one into his mouth and chews dramatically, loudly, and obnoxiously. He hums as if itâs the best candy heâs ever tasted, âBest ones in the state, baby. Sure, you donât want me to momma bird you?â He asks, popping another one in as he glances at you.
You grimace, looking at him, tone drenched in all seriousness and play, âYou better not spit that at me,â you warn.
Eddie turns to you slowly, lips full of threat, chewed-up sugar bullets ready to fire. âI could. Iâve got perfect aim.â
You gape in disgust, blinking in disbelief, âYouâre disgusting.â You exclaim. His lips purse, and your hand clamps over his mouth, startled but still smiling. âChew, Munson. And swallow. Iâll sit here all night.â
His eyes sparkle, darting between the road and you, lips pressed into a smile against your palm. One brow lifts, smug, like heâs silently saying thatâs not as much of a threat as you think it is.
You tap your finger against his cheek, unrelenting in your demand. He laughs, swallows, then nips at your palm, smiling when you squeal and pull away with a curse of his name. You roll your eyes, dragging your hand against the material of your skirt as you glare at him, though your glare does nothing to extinguish the pure joy on his face.
âYouâre a pain in the ass.â
âItâs my best quality.â
The tension in your shoulders has unraveled, just a little. Enough to let you enjoy the rest of the ride and not freeze when Eddie reaches out and flicks his fingers softly against your knee when he says something elseâsomething dumb and playful.
It makes you feel warm and fuzzy around the edges, like the last time youâve smiled this much for this long was in a dream.
The drive-in is past the fairgrounds, just like Eddie had said, but itâs not the one you remember. This one is a lot more⊠handmade. Itâs behind an old, rusted warehouse surrounded by a field and a gravel parking lot where cars are lined upâ some parked like theyâve been here all day, and others parked without a care in the world, crooked and taking up space.
It looks like something out of a dream, if the dream were hazardous and a little bit illegal. There are fraying extension cords snaking on the gravel, and dented trucks are parked parallel to hold up a white sheet that sways in the wind. The projector flickers every so often on the sheet, casting a light against it like itâs fighting to stay alive. Warm lights are lit across the lot, lawn chairs are scattered around cracked open coolers, and a faint hum of music from a van that looks just as run-down as Eddieâs. Itâs the kind of scene that looks warm and feels exactly so.
Eddie parks the van with the back facing the movie. He greets a guy when he steps out, someone named Mickey with rowdy hair, stoned eyes, and a blunt. Mickey supposedly makes the best gas station nachos, and for some reason, you absolutely believe that.
You both climb in, Eddie first because he swears heâs a gentleman thatâs not grabbing for a chance to look at your ass even though you caught him doing so just moments before. Inside, Eddie has tossed in a nest of mismatched pillows and blankets, thrown around in a cozy manner yet somehow chaotically organized. Snacks and drinks are stashed in a bag, snuggled into the blankets like itâll keep them cool.Â
You fail to suppress a smirk as you settle with your back resting against the seats, raising a brow as you glance at him, âSo, this is your thing? Lure unsuspecting girls into your van with snacks, blankets, and a movie?â
Eddie scoffs, feigning a wounded expression as he crashes in next to you, already grabbing a drink and passing one to you, âYou think I do this for just anyone?â
You take the canned drink, cracking it open with a hiss and sipping with a hum, âAbsolutely.â
Eddie gasps dramatically, clutching the drink to his chest. âIâm wounded, princess. Truly. I fought hard for this, by the way. And I thought we had something special.â
You shoot him a dry look over the rim of your can. âYou said that after I let you steal one of my fries.â
âBecause we do,â he says, matter-of-factly. âYou just donât recognize the depth of our cosmic bond yet. I mean, remember that kiss? Knocked the wind outta me. Couldâve sworn I saw your eyes roll.â
Your face warms. Itâs faint, but unmistakable, like a match sparking beneath your skin. You try to hide it with a scoff, nudging his shin with your foot as he giggles.
âMy eyes didnât roll. How would you even know? Your eyes were supposed to be closed.â
Eddie hums, unbothered, ripping a bag of sour candies open. âIâve got a third eye. The bangs arenât just an accessory.â He digs a piece of candy out, popping it in his mouth before offering the bag to you. You pick one, toss it in, and immediately regret it. The taste is sharp and mean, catching in your throat and pulling a wince from your chest.Â
You cough through it, taking a sip of your drink to ease the stress, âJesus. Is that candy or chemical warfare?â You cringe.
Eddie grins around his chew, popping another in like itâs nothing, âLittle from column A, little from column B.â
You swallow the candy, shaking your head as you lean back on your hands, stretching your legs out, âYour taste in candy is criminal.â
âFunny. Thatâs what they said about my music, too.â He drums his fingers against his drink like itâs a snare, mock-riffing. âIâm a menace across multiple industries.â
You roll your eyes, but your lips tug upward despite yourself. The movie flickers on the sheet in front of you, voices murmuring from the speaker someone set up between the trucks. The air smells like weed and sunscreen, someoneâs smoking close enough to catch the faint buzz of it.
Eddie shifts beside you, closer without fully touching, like heâs testing the air between you. You donât move away; somehow, the closeness relaxes you more than youâd imagined. Your laughs become loose around the edges, Eddieâs limbs soften, and your eyes meet more.
The van warms in a summery haze with quiet laughter, hushed jokes behind mouthfuls of candy, and the occasional moment when either of you pretends to care about the movie. And somewhere between that, your ankle passes Eddieâs, like a ghost, a memory of the diner, and a nudge into something more.
Eddie is warm beside you, and his thigh presses against yours each time he shifts, which, unfairly, seems to happen more often than not. Your bodies are pressed close, your arms touching, a film of sugar forming over your tongues.
âSo,â He speaks softly, warm breath dusting over your temple, a smile trickling around the edges, a nervous undertone so quiet you almost miss it. âGive me the verdict. Whatâs my rating now?â
You glance at him. His eyes are on you, not the movie. Your eyes dart back to the movie, a small smirk easing across your lips.
âFour stars.â
Eddie scoffs, dramatically offended, âFour?! Out of five?â
âMhm.â You nod your head, still pretending to watch the movie.
âWhy? What did I do?â He stresses.
You shrug, âYou forgot my flowers.â
Eddie pauses, only the hum of the movie filtering through the van. He sits up a little, âWho said I forgot âem?â
You glance at him, just in time to see him turn around and reach over the middle console, rummaging through bags and the empty soda cans he keeps tossing back. You watch, listen to him mutter to himself, toss aside a hoodie beforeâ âAha!â
He plops back beside you, triumphantly smiling as he extends a hand to you, clutching something, âIâm a man of my word.â
A single rose.
Wellâ it was a rose. At one point. Now itâs a little mangled, missing a few leaves, petals slightly crushed, stem bent in the middle like it gave up halfway through standing tall.
Your hand flies to your mouth.
âYou let it die before it got to me?â
âI was freaking the fuck out!â Eddie exclaims, absolutley not ashamed, âI got it two hours before I picked you up. And then I forgot it. But then I remembered during the drive and panicked and tried to hide it in the snack bagââ
You burst out with laughter. The sad, wilted rose hangs between you as a testament to Eddieâs story. It makes your ribs ache with lack of air, and your cheeks warm as Eddie tries to explain why his gift is now fit for a compost pile. And thenâ to your horrorâ your breath hitches and you snort. A real, startled, uncontrolled snort, right from your lips. And you immediately clap a hand over your mouth like you can shove it back in.
Eddie goes stock still, eyes wide as he looks at you.
â...Oh my god,â he whispers, âDid you justââ
âShut up,â you groan, face burning as you shove the rose against his chest,
Eddie places a hand over yours, grasping it like a lifeline as he laughs in awestruck disbelief. âNo, noâ jesus christ. What was that? Do that again.â
âEddieââ
âPlease,â he begs around a laugh, clutching the rose like a microphone, âDo it again. I think I hear angels.â
You groan again, laughing harder now as you collapse sideways, not even thinking when you bury your face in Eddieâs shoulder to hide your embarrassment. His body shakes with laughter, both you warm and full of it. His free arm wraps around you instinctively, pulling you close, and when he glances down at youâyour nose tucked against his shirt, his rose wilting between youâhe softens.
Warmth radiates from him like a furnace, and for a second, you just stay there, trying to catch your breath, your cheeks aching from smiling. And in the quiet stretch of time, you feel it shift.
The buzzing, the teasing, the fizzy high laughterâ it all slows, softens. His thumb rubs an absent-minded circle over your side. You tilt your head, nose brushing over his collarbone, and when you glance up, heâs already looking at you.
Thereâs a crease between his brows, like heâs trying to memorize something. Like heâs caught off guard by how much he likes you in this moment. And you canât exactly laugh about it because, well, you feel it too. You feel how good this is, how real it feels, tangible and soft and bright.
He shifts, eyes flickering over your face. âHey,â He softly says, voice low, reverent.Â
You blink up at him. âHey.â
His fingers, rough and calloused, dust across your jaw.
And then, quieter: âYou gonna let me kiss you again?â
You donât answer. You donât have to.
He kisses exactly how youâd been dreaming of since the first kiss. This time, he tastes like the night's warmth, laughter sprinkled over his tongue, and sugar behind his teeth. You fall into it like muscle memory. Like your body had been prepping for it all this time.
You pull away first. Barely. Just enough to breathe. Though you canât breathe much when your bodies are still pressed so close like thisâ Eddieâs arm holding you, you practically draped over him.
Your eyes flicker to the side, a nearly unbearable heat creeping up your chest, lips tingling like theyâre still pressed to his. You feel him watching you, still, drafting the aftermathâ quietly smug, fond in that boyish way that makes you want to kiss him all over again just to shut him up.
He lifts the roseâpathetic, crushed thingâand sniffs it theatrically before murmuring, âStill smells like a rose.â
You laughâ canât help itâ and the softest little snort escapes. You donât care to hide it this time. And Eddie lights up like a kid on Christmas.
âAgain!â He whispers, scandalized and delighted. You roll your eyes as he tugs you closer, âIâm two for two!â
âYouâre annoying.â You weakly push at him as he grins.Â
âHow many people have gotten you to laugh like that, hm? Come on.â He leans in, nuzzles your cheek like itâs muscle memory, smiling when you squirm away from him. âTell me Iâm the one and only. Say it. Say, âEddie Munson is my laughter lord and chaos prince.ââ
You bat away at him, trying and failing to suppress your smile. âYouâre so stupid.â
âAnd you snort when you laugh. Which means I win.â
You roll your eyes, settled against his shoulder, snuggled like you belong there. âIâm regretting kissing you.â You halfheartedly murmur.
âNo, youâre not,â he grins. He twists the rose between his fingers, eyes gently flickering over your face. Then, gently, he runs the soft rose petals over the bridge of your nose. The brittle petals whisper across your skin, light and teasing, until they dust the tip of your nose. Your nose crinkles on instinct.
Eddie freezes, dragging in a breath. âDonât move.â He whispers like heâs trying not to spook a deer. âThatâs the cutest thing Iâve ever seen in my entire fucking life.â
You laugh, batting the rose away as you giggle, âYouâre a sap.â
âAnd youâre a shitfaced liar,â he mumbles lowly, leaning forward, eyes dancing across your face. His eyes flicker to your lips like magnets pulled to steel. Your breath stutters, eyes stuck on his. âYou totally wanna kiss me again.â
You fight the smile on your lips as you shake your head, âNo.â
Eddieâs already leaning closer, eyes flickering to your smile as one approaches his lips, âYeah, you do.â
Your false protest dies on his lips. Itâs softer this time. Slower. Deeper. More curious, like heâs trying to memorize you from the inside out.Â
The rose falls to the ground somewhere, wilted and pathetic. Eddie pulls you close, lips twitching against yours like heâs quietly reminding you that he won. His fingers splay wide across your back, knuckles curling into your top as you press against him, his other hand coming up to cup your face.Â
Your fingers curl against his chest, holding on like you need it to anchor yourself. Your legs shift between his, and youâre nearly draped over him when you tilt your head, lips parting in an invitation that he takes like itâs sacred.Â
His tongue slides against yoursâ slow, careful, sweetâ and your body reacts before your mind catches up.Â
Heat licks up your spine, curling in your belly, and you melt into him. Everything else fadesâ the movie, the night air, the mess of candy wrappers and pillows around you. It all collapses beneath his lips, the sinful flick of his tongue against yours, his fingers curling around your waist, the tremble in your thighs.Â
You make a sound you donât mean to. A soft, involuntary moan caught between a hitch in your breath, featherlight and aching.Â
Eddie pulls away. Quick and abrupt. Like heâs just touched something electric.
His breathingâs uneven, lips pink and bruised, pupils blown wide in disbelief. âYeah,â he shakily breathes, eyes darting like he canât afford to look at you. He peels his body from yours, âYeah. Okay. Thatâs enough. No more.â
You blink, wide-eyed and dazed, âWhatâ?â
âIâm gonna jizz my pants.â He says, completely deadpan. He presses a palm to his crotch as he sits up, eyes blown as they dart around the floor of the van, like somewhere in the rubble, heâll find his dignity. âLike. Seriously. Iâm gonna blow a load in my pantsâ you canât just⊠you canât make sounds like that.â
You laugh, sharp and bright, your face flushing all over again. Eddie looks at you like youâre insane and groans, âUnbelievable. Youâre laughing? At a time like this?â
âI didnât mean to,â you say, halfheartedly and amused.
âYou moaned, babe. Into my mouth. Like weâre in some kind of fucked up romance novel.â
âI barely did.â You argue.
âI felt it vibrate in my soul.â
You drop your face into your hands, hiding your warm cheeks, ignoring your mind as it replays the scene over and over again, but Eddieâs already tugging your wrists down, grinning like a menace, one thumb brushing over your pulse as the other brushes your cheek.Â
âDonât hide,â he says, a little gentler this time, âIt was hot. Youâre hot. Thatâs the whole problem.â
You groan, rolling your eyes as Eddie grins. âIâm never kissing you again.â
Eddie flops beside you with a contented sigh, stretching out like a happy cat, folding one arm behind his head. âIn your dreams, honeybee.â He grins, crossing one ankle over the other.Â
âYouâve kissed meâ thrice now. Nearly killed me with that last one, too, so,â he shrugs, âI know your secrets. I own your laugh. Itâs mine.â
You narrow your eyes, glaring at him, fighting to keep your gaze from wandering back to his lips. âYou donât own anything.â
âWrong,â Eddie loudly claims. He cracks a can of soda open, taking a sip before speaking, âI own your laugh. That snort? Thatâs legally binding.â
And for some reason, you decide not to fight him on that.
Eddie starts the van back up exactly fifteen minutes before midnight.
You both climb out, dusting off crumbs and straightening your clothes to at least try and look like you didnât spend the last twenty minutes of the movie chasing each other's lips. You can barely pay any mind to the commotion of other cars around you as you waltz to the passenger side because youâre still buzzing with the feeling of Eddieâs body pressed to yours.
The drive is quiet, but much different than the last time youâd spent in the silence of his van. This time, thereâs a content lull in the air. Your head leans against the window, your skin warm and flushed in the places his hands had been. Your lips still tingle. Eddie hums to an old cassette, drumming his fingers against the steering wheel like heâs trying to burn off the leftover energy.Â
Familiar trees pass in a blur, softer this time, like the night has smudged a yellow glow over your eyes. You feel it in your chest. In the way your fingers twist in your lap, thrumming with a need to touch something. You donât look at Eddie, too afraid of what youâll do if you catch a glimpse of him.
The streetlight buzzes overhead when he stops below it, the same one he picked you up from. Somewhere in your purse, the crushed-up rose sits, folded up and full of the night. Later, youâll pull it out and stare at it like it might summon the curly-headed boy into your room. You think you might already miss this night, as if youâre not still sitting in it. And that shakes something loose behind your ribs. Fear, hope, dread. It all mixes together and pumps through you like a drug.
Eddie drags in a dramatic breath, tapping the wheel a few times, âFive minutes to midnight, Cinderella.â
You glance at him, fingers curling around the strap of your purse. âSo,â he hums, glancing away for a moment, âYou gonna kiss me goodbye?â
You lift a brow, watching as pearly white canines peek out from Eddieâs smile. âDo you know how dramatic you are?â
Eddie scoffs, âOf course I do.â
âAnd you watch way too many romance films.â
Eddie presses a hand over his heart, âIâm a hopeless romantic. Sue me for having a hobbyâ you know what Iâm not hearing though?â
You press your lips together, fighting a smile as you hum.
âIâm not hearing a no.â
You roll your eyes, reaching for the door handle, your smile finally cracking when Eddie leans across the console and tugs at your arm. âCâmon, baby,â he purrs, âOne for the road.â
You turn to him, looking at him draped over the console like some stupid, dramatic Renaissance painting. He looks up at you, a glimmer in his eyes, and something soft and warm. His thumb drags over your elbow, gentle and kind.
You turn more to him, lean down, and kiss him. Itâs light. Slow and sure, like something youâd tuck in your pocket and keep.
You pull away, your nose dusting over his, not quite fully pulling away just yet, when your eyes dance for a moment. Eddieâs lips twitch into a smirk, his voice gentle when he speaks, âMaybe you watch too many romance films.â
You roll your eyes, pulling back and turning to open the door.
âSame time tomorrow?â Eddie pathetically calls as you step down from his van.
âGoodnight, Eddie.â You shut the door before he can say anything else, but not quickly enough to hide the smile that lingers on your lips.
And you donât look back, but you know Eddie doesnât start the van back up until you disappear behind the next block.
Eddie weasels his way in like a professional con artist.
Itâs not much different from beforeâ Eddie was always somewhere lounging around your house from the beginning, but now, itâs different. Now, itâs loud. Big. Because now you know what his hands feel like on your skin. You know how he sounds when heâs breathless. You know his laugh, his smile, and the way he downs a can of soda like heâs just crawled out of the desert.
You know his favorite color is blood red. He likes sour candies even though they make his entire body shiver âlike heâs dyingâ. He names inanimate objects and talks about them like theyâre real people. He hates window shopping, but he doesnât mind that you enjoy it.
You donât know all of him, but the parts that you do? It feels like everything. And it suffocates your days like wet heat.
And it makes your insides churn whenever you see him, relaxed on your couch, bickering with Steve about something you donât even care to listen to because youâre stuck thinking about how you were under him. Just two days ago.
You busy yourself, like before, only this time, it doesnât work at all. The last time you tried to occupy yourself to forget about whatever is unfolding between you and Eddie, it at least worked until the silence crept in. But now, Eddie runs through your mind as if he were made to be there. And again, it doesnât help that heâs constantly in front of you, cracking sly grins like he knows exactly what youâre thinking. Like he can tell youâve been pacing holes into the carpet of your room and clenching your thighs every time you get a whiff of him.Â
Itâs mental and physical torture.Â
And now, youâre fidgeting in your room, listening to the low rumble of his voice through the walls like some yearning lunatic.
You shift against the cool comforter of your bed, tapping your fingers against your stomach as the fan whirs above you. You swallow and shift your gaze to the wall, attempting to fool yourself into believing youâre not phased by any of this. That youâre not listening to the music humming from Steveâs stereo, and remembering the way Eddie had played that same song and sang off-key to it, stealing kisses between each purposely cracked high note. You shouldnât remember the way his tongue moved. You shouldnât still feel it.
You rise from your bed with a huff, padding your way out and down the stairs, on a mission to grab a drink you donât need. You open the fridge and stare at it for some time, letting the cool breeze drip over you like a breath of fresh air.Â
You donât hear his steps until heâs beside you, arm brushing against yours when he speaks, âYouâre gonna get cold standing there like that.â
You donât bother looking away from the fridge's contents when you respond, âIâm hot.â
âYeah,â he says slowly, âYou are.â
You grab a bottle of water and shut the fridge with a roll of your eyes, âDo you usually haunt every house in Hawkins, or is this just the lucky one?â
Eddie snorts, leaning against the counter as he grabs an orange from the bowl of fruits on the island. He shrugs, âI make my rounds. Got a thing for the houses with cute girls that walk around in tiny shorts.â His eyes glance down at your bare thighs.Â
You ignore the warmth that spreads up your neck and donât bother tugging down your shorts. You shift in your spot, tilting your head, âYou sound like a creep, you realize that, right?â
Eddie grins, leaning into your space, orange forgotten on the counter, âKiss me again. Before I forget what it feels like.â
You donât bother moving away from his proximity. Or maybe you just donât want to. Either way, you stay put, breathing in his air like itâs not fogging up the senses in your brain. âItâs not healthy to be this clingy.â
âGod, tell me about it. I cry myself to sleep. Kiss meâ give me somethinâ new to sob about tonight.â
You look at him, deadpanned, tryingâand failingâ to suppress that fond look spreading across your face.Â
Upstairs, Steve calls out for Eddie and tells him to hurry the fuck up.
Eddie lifts a brow, tilting his head, âTimeâs a tickinâ, honeybee.â
So you kiss him. There, in the kitchen, with Steve just upstairs, not knowing that his best friend has his tongue shoved down your throat. And⊠you donât care. At least not at the moment.
You let him kiss you breathless, one hand on your face, the other squeezing your hip, spilling a whispered moan on your lips like a prayer.Â
He groans low in his throat, hand sliding down until his fingers dance across the hem of your shirt, fingers slipping beneath the thin cotton to brush at the bare skin of your hip. The counter digs into your spine, but you barely notice it. Youâre too busy chasing the heat of his mouth, too dazed by the way he kisses you like heâs starving.
Your fingers thread into his hair, his tongue licking across the ridges of your teeth. One of your legs lifts, hooking around his hip like itâs instinct, and you swear he gasps into your mouth, like he wasnât expecting that.Â
âJesus,â he mumbles against your lips, kissing you between each word like he canât afford to spend a second without tasting you, âYou keep doing that, and Iâm gonnaââ
âEDDIE!â Steve yells again, angrier this time, âWeâre fucking losing, man, hurry up!â
Eddie breaks the kiss with a groan, one last squeeze to your waist, âShit,â he grumbles. One last kiss, and then he pulls away. He looks pained. A little guilty. Hair roused, cheeks flushed. âGotta jet, sweetfang. Duty calls.â
âSweetfaâ?â
âGood stuff, by the way. Almost tops when you moaned my name.â He winks. You blink, dazed and confused, watching as he grabs the orange and backs away towards the stairs.
âI never moaned your name.â You argue.Â
âReally?â He tilts his head, eyes gleaming with that usual glint that says heâs definitely being annoying on purpose, âCouldâve sworn you did.â
He disappears up the stairs with a grin and a bounce in his step, leaving you flushed and spinning in the middle of the kitchen.
You stay there a moment longer than necessary, still clutching the unopened bottle of water, still trying to catch your breath. The fridge hums behind you. The fan in the living room clicks softly. And Eddieâs voice echoes somewhere in your skull â really? Couldâve sworn you did.
Heâs infuriating. Heâs relentless. Heâs everywhere.
And god help you, heâs starting to taste like a habit.
It festers slowly and thick at first.
One morning, youâre telling yourself that this is careless and you should stop whatever thing is going on between you and Eddie. Then, by the afternoon, youâre sitting on top of Steveâs car in the garage, eyeing Eddie as he lights a cigarette and saysâ âYou ever think about how your left eye sparkles more than your right?â
And itâs so stupid. Heâs stupid. And it makes you smile as you shove him away like you donât want him to be closer, like heâs not already crawling under your skin and carving out a space between the grooves of your brain.Â
And then itâs like a flicker in your periphery. Like a dream where you had been in one place and then you blinked and youâre suddenly in a completely different setting with entirely different people.Â
Eddie finds his way to you like heâs a dog with a keen nose for your scent. He slips into your room like a man on a mission, spreads a palm over your mouth, and smiles when he feels your mistaken giggle against his skin, pressing you into your bed with hot, slow kisses that make your insides twist. Heâs reckless and aware, always pulling away when the clock ticks, and he remembers where you are and whose house youâre in.
He takes you to the lake one night and drags you in despite your protestsâ and that little Eddie-shaped hole in your brain quivers to life when he grins at you, wet hair plastered across his cheeks, droplets of water melting beneath your lips when you kiss them away.Â
He pulls you into his favorite record storeâ two towns over, an elderly man at the counter, and a thin fog of dust hanging between each shelfâ and Eddieâs waltzing through like itâs his home. He shows you his favorite albums, which records heâs yet to put on his shelf, which ones he thinks youâd like, and he loops a finger through the belt loop of your shorts like touching you is second natureâ and by then your body is fully tethered to the drug that goes by the name of Eddie Munson.
And when you think about itâ when you really sit down and think about itâ between Eddieâs loud way of attracting and your quiet way of obsessing, you never stood a chance.
âYou nervous?â
Eddieâs fingertips are warm against the skin of your temple, gentle as they poke like he can pluck the thoughts straight from your mind and see them for himself.
His home is warm and humming with that summer afternoon daze that seeps through when you part the blinds to let the sun drip in like a hazy memory. Youâre perched on his couch, legs tucked beneath your body, a cozy sweater loose around your arms.
Eddieâs beside you, dressed in sweats and a wrinkled shirt, curls pulled into an abomination of a bun. Heâs got a record spinningâ Black Sabbath: Master of Realityâ which he claimed to be the best way to feel the high and be high. You didnât know what he meant by that, but you donât exactly know what he means a lot of the time because Eddie just kind of spits out the first things that come to his mind until they make a complete sentence.Â
He pokes at you again, his other hand hovering over the coffee table, a blunt curled between his fingers, waiting to be sealed. You bat at him, pulling a face when he jabs a gentle finger at your lips.Â
âNo.â
âYou totally are.â He grins, turning back to his task. You watch as he twists and turns the paper around crushed nuggets of weed, expertly moving around like itâs a mindless craft. He licks the edge, smoothing it beneath his thumb before grabbing the lighter and settling back into the couch.
He lifts the blunt, glancing at you with a lazy smirk tugging at his lips, âThis right here,â he broadly gestures to the room, the music, the muted TV flickering forgotten images, the glow of the setting sun, and you perched next to him, watching him like gospel, âThis is Godâs gift, baby.â
You raise a brow, and his grin widens, thumb flicking the lighter to life once.
âThis,â he continues, lowering his voice to something just above a whisper, reverent and teasing, âis how we get closer to God.â
You snort, rolling your eyes when you respond, âYouâre making it sound like a ritual.â
He sighs, satisfied in his dramatics as he wriggles against the couch and sticks the blunt between his lips, âIt is,â he pauses, flickering the lighter once again, burning the end of the thick paper. He sucks it in like second nature, the burnt smell already dancing up your nose when he exhales, slow and dreamy, speaking through a cloud of smoke, âHoly communion, but with way better music.â
He offers it to you, holding it delicately between his fingers, the end burns soft and orange. You hesitate, just for a beat, eyeing it like it might bite you. His eyes are already on you, half-lidded and slow and warm.
âYou donât have to,â he softly reminds you. âI can snuff it out. We can get high on sugar, and you can kiss me until my head blows⊠Both heads.â
You grimace, taking the blunt, knuckles brushing against his, and he doesnât look away. Neither do you.
âYouâre gross.â You mumble, ignoring Eddieâs snickers as you bring the blunt to your lips. You take your time to inhale, let it drip down the sides of your body, and lick the sticky spots of your brain. You cough, once, then twice, and Eddieâs chuckling before you say anything.
âOh yeah,â he grins, watching as you cough a few more times, âThatâs the good shit. Your soulâs already half-floatin' outta your body.â
You glare, but itâs weak. Your lungs sting a bit, and your chest feels a tinge warmer than before. âAgain,â he encourages, âLet it sit, get your brain fuzzy.â
So you do. You trust him with it.Â
You take another hit, eyes dancing with his as you drag it slowly, holding it in longer. It burns sweet and low and slips down your throat like a secret. Somewhere beneath the layers of your skin, the pink hollows out to a nice, warm buzz.Â
Eddie watches as the cloud of smoke drifts from your mouth, slipping his knuckles next to yours when you hand him the blunt, âShit, thatâs fuckinâ hot. Youâre a goddamn pro. Lay it on me, baby.â
You donât think twice, leaning forward and meeting him halfway into a kiss. Itâs short and sweet, like itâs muscle memory now, and you both just want it like a deep breath.Â
Eddie kisses you again, deeper this time, slow and sultry, until heâs forced to pull away from the burn in his lungs. He blinks, low and lazy, a loose grin on his lips when he looks at you.
âHowâs your brain?â
You smile, leaning back into the couch, closer to him, goosebumps rising over your knee when he touches it. âFuzzy. Like Iâm⊠dreaming but awake.â
He smiles something devious, twisting the blunt between his knuckles as he lifts it back to his mouth, âThatâs good weed. Thatâs Master of Reality weed. Straight from the stars.â
You snort, leaning back further as the music hums around you, thick and dark, like the room itself is humming in tune. You pass the blunt a few more times, careful not to inhale too deeply. Youâre already floating. You feel it in your spine, in the heavy, molten drag of your limbs.
You wave your hand in surrender on the fifth offer, melting down into his couch as you groan, âNo more. Iâll become smoke myself if I take any more.âÂ
Eddie smokes it down to an inch, rambling on about this and that and getting distracted when his favorite verse from âLord of This Worldâ plays from the stereo.Â
âOhâ oh, shh. This part isâthis part is holy.â
He closes his eyes, socked feet planted in the carpet, knees spread as he drops his head back, throat bared and soft like heâs in the middle of a sermon, and air-guitars the bassline with a reverence that borders on offensive. You cover your mouth to stifle a laugh, and he throws his head around, curls bouncing with every exaggerated nod.Â
He opens one eye and peeks at you, throwing one thumb your way when he speaks, âThatâs gonna be me in hell, by the way.â
You huff a laugh, and he grins, âLike, you think itâs gonna be flames and pitchforks, but noâ Iâm just down there rockinâ out with Satan, doing solos while he adjusts the EQ.â
You finally lose it. You wheeze out a laugh so hard your body curls and your head hits the pillow in your lap, uncontrollable giggles slipping from your lips. The weed makes the room feel light, more vivid, more real, and less timed.
âYou think Iâd look good in little red horns?â Eddie asks. He gazes off in front of him, squinting to find the picture. âI feel like I could make it work. Add some flair. Punk rock prince of darkness.â
You lift your head, gasping around a fit of laughter, âYou sound ridiculous.â
Eddie scoffs, âGet real, babe,â he starts, âYou meet me in a club and Iâve got tiny horns and glitter eyeliner? Iâm like a haunted cupidâ donât act like you wouldnât make a mistake.â
Youâre nearly crying at the image, Eddie joining in on the laughter until youâre left breathless and aching, your legs draped over his, leaning into his shoulder like itâs natural for you.
Eddieâs tracing lazy patterns on your knee by the time the record shifts into the next song, slower and thick with a steady bass, layered with occasional drops of naked strings and a haunting flute.Â
Youâre reminded then, with Eddieâs warmth sticking to you and his scent filling your lungs, that thisâwhatever this isâis getting harder and harder to dance around. Youâre reminded that itâs getting difficult to keep pretending this doesnât mean something.
Eddieâs hand drifts toward yours, his fingers brushing over your knuckles. âTell me something real.â
You blink. Then hum, soft and sticky, âLike what?â
Eddie shrugs, his chest rumbles beneath your cheek when he speaks, âI dunno,â he lifts your pointer finger and drops it, playful, accepting when you curl it around his thumb, cool silver kissing your skin. âFirst thing that comes to mind.â
You hum again, watching as your fingers dance. Your heart races. You shove away the voice of reason in your head, hesitating momentarily before you reply, âI wanted to hold your hand at that stupid bonfire.â
Eddie huffs a sharp laugh, âI fuckinâ knew it.â
You groan with a roll of your eyes, shifting to move away, only to be caught by his hold. He kisses you. Cups your face and hums like youâre a sweet drink.
âI did too,â he says, as if you didnât already know. âBut I thought Iâd get punched.â
You snort, not bothering to deny yourself another kiss before you mumble, âYou wouldâve.â
He smiles, his mouth still pressed against yours, his fingers spreading and wandering over your thighs, waist, dipping beneath your sweater. You get tangled, shifting over him until your knees are pressed into the couch on either side of him, and heâs letting out a low groan in the back of his throat, fingers squeezing at your lower back like he needs to remind himself where he is in the space of reality.Â
You donât know how you stray down the path; things move slowly and fast simultaneously, and his touch is warm and greedy. Rough hands anywhere he can freely reach, lips losing composure against yours before they drag over your jaw and down your neck.
You gasp a wet breath, every pass of his mouth over your skin sends shivers ricocheting down your spine. You tilt your head, hungry for more, chasing the sensation.
Eddie groans, nuzzles against you, and drags in a breath like you can cure him from the inside out. He mumbles somethingâ your name or maybe a curseâ and lets his hands drag up against your bare sides and back down to the base of your spine. He pulls you close, moaning when you shift over him, nipping at the skin of your neck when your breath hitches.Â
âFuck, baby,â he whispers, âYou keep doing that, and Iâm gonna explode.â
You smile, sinking a hand into his hair, gently directing his mouth back to yours. You shift against him again, tasting his moan just as youâd planned, drinking it down like wine. He kisses you breathless, open-mouthed and slow, dragging his tongue through your mouth until youâre gasping. Itâs easy to drown in him. Easy not to think.
He shifts, holds you against him, and places you beneath him on the couch, holding himself up with a hand beside your head. You follow each of his kisses, chasing him when he threatens to wander, fingers curled against his shirt.Â
His kisses are sloppy and greedy, trailing down your jaw and neck, hands pushing up your sweater to mouth at your tummy as he slinks his way down your body. His hair is messy, barely held with a hair tie, spilling around his face in soft, dark waves. Itâs soft beneath your fingertips as you glance down at him, goosebumps rising over your skin when he kisses just below your navel.Â
You want to look away, the heat crawling up your neck wants you to look awayâ laugh it off, pretend itâs not serious. But you canât. Youâre caught in it. In him.
Your mind is floaty and warm, neurons misfiring when his rough hands drag over your hips, knuckles leaving sparks behind when they curl over the waistband of your shorts to pull them down your thighs.
Theyâre dropped somewhere off to the side, useless and out of mind, when he smears his lips over the inside of your knee.Â
He spreads you out, gazing over your clothed core like it holds the answers to life, death, and everything in between.
Youâve never been looked at like this.Â
Not like youâre just prettyânot like youâre some girl a guy wants to mess around with and forget about. No, Eddie looks at you like youâre his first and last sin, like heâs been wandering through the world with a hunger and only just now figured out what it was for.
And itâs you. You, spread out on his couch, still flushed and buzzing from the slow burn of weed, and his fingers tracing over your thighs like a prelude. You, half naked in panties and a sweater, and nervous beneath the low lamp glow of his living room, heart thrumming so hard it makes your breath catch.
His gaze flickers up to yours, brown eyes gleaming with something soft and lustful. He kisses somewhere on your inner thigh, fingers giving you a gentle squeeze.Â
âYou okay?â He asks, voice lower now. Gravely, quieter. Like itâd be a sin to break the hush of the room.
You nod too fast, then slow yourself. âYeahâŠâ You breathe. Your fingers curl against the couch, elbows digging into the velvet material. âJust⊠you're looking at me like that.â
His lips twitch into a grin, eyes dropping to your stomach where his hand splays out, anchoring you to the moment. âCanât help it,â he says, âYouâre looking at me like no oneâs ever touched you before.â
âBecause no one has.â
You donât realize what youâve said until the words are already out, barely louder than the low hum of Sabbath still playing in the background.Â
Itâs not like you werenât planning to tell him. Honestly, you were sure it'd never even get this far. And youâre not ashamed about it. Especially not when all Eddie does is pause, eyes flickering between yours, like heâs tasting the truth of your words.Â
And then he softens.Â
His lips curl against your knee, a hand dragging over your other thigh as he murmurs, âThanks for telling me, honeybee.â
Itâs the nameâ the way it drips from his mouth with a different thickness than all those other times he calls you thatâ it tugs something loose in your chest.
He drags a finger over your cotton-covered center, just one, barely even applying pressure over the softest part of you. You clench around nothing, throbbing like a heartbeat. And Eddie feels it beneath his thumb.
âAlready?â He murmurs, amused, voice a little wicked, a little worshipful. You let out something like a strangled whine hidden in a shaky breath. âThatâs cute.â
You shift, lips parted like you want to say something but canât quite find the words. Eddie leans down and noses at the seam of your thigh, letting his curls tickle your skin.
âOpen up for me, baby.â
And you do. Just like that. Without hesitation. Like your brains completely gone and all thatâs left thinking for you is your pussy.
He hooks his thumbs into the waistband of your panties and drags them down slowly, like unwrapping a gift. They join your shorts in a forgotten land somewhere.
Eddie settles between your thighs with a look of wonder. âOh, fuck,â he breathes. âLook at you.â
Youâre squirming now. Cheeks burning, legs wanting to close like you can hide your arousal as if itâs not dripping onto his couch, but he holds your thighs open with steady hands.Â
âNuh-uh,â he gently says, âCâmon, let me look at you. Youâre so fuckinâ pretty.â
Eddie doesnât look the least bit ashamed of how heâs ogling you. In fact, he seems quite pleased with himself when he dusts a thumb over your clit just to make you clench again, like he wanted to see it for himself this time.Â
He slides a finger down your pussy, all the way down to the stream of wet, sticky arousal leaking from you. He drags it back up to your clit and introduces a second finger to part your folds, exposing you for all your worth. You squirm, heart racing, something devious and hot settling in your gut.Â
He hums, hooking a hand around your thigh and pressing a kiss to the inside of it. His lips trail wet kisses along the inside of your thigh, open-mouthed and unhurried. Your breath snags when he lingers, a thumb caressing your hip, eyes flicking up to meet yours again. He looks like heâs waiting for somethingâ permission maybe. Your tongue is heavy in your mouth.
You tilt your hips in invitation.
Eddie moves like a man on a mission.
His mouth brushes over you so gently at first, more thought than touch. His breath is warm against you, cooling the heat of your cunt like ice on hot skin. You gasp, your hips twitching, and he pulls back slightly, murmuring something you canât quite catchâ something that sounds like so sensitive, laced with laughter and awe. He kisses you, lips pursed over your clit like something holy.
Then his tongue movesâ slow, deliberate. Laving through your folds, dipping lower to catch the wetness dripping from your hole, tasting itâtasting you. You can feel him learning you. Not fumbling or nervous, but curiousâ measured. Every flick, every kiss, every drag of his mouth is purposeful, like heâs sorting the puzzle pieces out before placing them down, twisting them this way and that to figure out what makes your legs shake.
And itâs new. So new. Youâve touched yourself before, obviously. But thisâ Eddieâ his tongue, his mouth, his hands? Itâs something else entirely. Itâs like being rewritten.
âGod, youâre sweet,â he groans, voice low and rough against your skin. One hand is firm on your thigh, holding you open, his thumb tracing over the quiver in your muscle. The other drags slowly up your belly, fingers spreading wide, feeling your breath stutter under his palm. A needy breath slips from your lips. You can no longer hold yourself up, the back of your head hitting the couch with a soft thud when your eyes flutter shut, a shaky hand finding his on your tummy, fingers lacing together.
His lips close around your clit, suckling soft and pointed with intention. You moanâ unfiltered and rawâ and thatâs all he needs.
Eddie doubles down, patience out the window, full throttle greed and lustâ firm, hungry, focused. The kind of pressure that makes your hips lift, your fingers tight around his, a litany of oh fuck ohfuckohfuck spinning through your mind so fast it barely registers.Â
You feel full of sensation. The heat curls in you tighter and tighter, unbearable, blindingâ and he wonât stop humming and moaning like every drop of you fills him with pleasure tooâ it makes your toes curl and the coil in your belly tenses.
âCâmon, let go for me,â he mumbles, lips dragging against your center. He licks your clit, suckles, hums. âDonât hold back on me, baby, justâ fuck, give it to me.â
Your eyes fly open. You donât even remember them squeezing shut. He looks up at you from between your thighs like heâs found religion. Like youâre god and heâs your loyal disciple. And the way youâre unraveling, crying out, legs trembling, stomach contracting under his hand, you think maybe you have to.
Another pass of his tongue, another suck at your clit, and youâre done. You come with a sharp, choked sound, thighs closing around his head as the pleasure bursts white-hot behind your eyes.
And he doesnât stop. He keeps drinking you in, licking and nuzzling into your wet heat like a man starved. He doesnât even seem like he has intentions to ever stopâ not until your hips twitch away from overstimulation, not until youâre whining out his name in a voice youâve never heard yourself use before.
He parts from you with a gasp, wet sticky strings of arousal bowing and snapping against his lips. He drags his mouth over the inside of your thigh, sticky pleasure smearing over your skin. His lips are pink and shiny, his grin wicked and proud. He looks wrecked. Happy.
He kisses the fold between your core and your thigh. Mouths his way up over your hip, breathes you in like a drug. âShit, honeybee,â he pants, nips at your rising tummy before he crawls up your body. âBest meal to date.â
You blink at him, dazed.
He taps your hip when you squirm. You mirror the lazy smile on his face. âTwenty out of ten,â he adds, smug. âCanât wait for the next visit.â
You laugh, breathless, shy, and boneless. You canât even be embarrassed.
Eddie kisses you with raw need, humming as he presses his body over you. âI saw heaven. She had your mouth. And your thighs.â
You huff out a laugh, lazy and spent, âYouâre gross.â
Eddie doesnât disagree.
Somewhere between the start of the night and 4 AM, you realize you have to go home.
Itâs with a dramatic groan from Eddie and the shameful event of grabbing your panties off his floor that you finally find enough life in your limbs to shove your feet into your shoes and make him grab his keys.Â
Eddieâs got a shit eating grin on his face the entire drive to your place. Heâs humming to the radio like a drunk idiot, drumming made-up rhythms against the skin of your thigh and acting like he canât tell how often youâre shifting in your seat like youâre sitting on hot rocks. The hot rocks being the constant flicker of mental images of Eddie between your thighs.
You donât want to leave.
You decided to admit that when he turns the corner onto your street. You wanted to stay there, in the Munson trailer, curled against Eddie and feeling weightless.
But you know you have to. Itâs late, and the world is waking up soon, and youâre supposed to be in your room by the time your father passes by your room to say goodbye for the day.
Eddie pulls up just far enough down the street to avoid the headlights hitting your windows. He puts the van in park but doesnât let go of your hand. When did you even start holding hands?
âSame time tomorrow?â
You glare at him, fingers twisting between his. âThat gonna be your signature line all summer?â
Eddie grins, âYou love it. Gets you giddy and smiley inside.â
You roll your eyes, failing to suppress the smile on your lips. You lean over to kiss him, just once, quick, before he can make another dumb joke, and you can think too hard about what it means now that youâve started to kiss him goodbye.
He kisses you back like he means it. Like he always does.
âGo,â he whispers against your lips, one thumb nudging your chin, âBefore I change my mind and lock the doors.â
One last kiss through a smile, and you hop out.Â
You walk the short distance, same as always, cringing at the soft creak of the front door when you open it. The house is still asleep. The faint hum of the fridge, the ticking of a clock. You move up the stairs like a ghost, slow and careful.
You pass Steveâs room, but the echoes of hesitation are nearly gone this time. Youâre too happy to stress over the implications. And not at this hour. Not after the night youâve had.
But thenâ ââŠWhere the fuck have you been?â
Steve is standing in the bathroom doorway, looking like heâs just stumbled out of a bar fight. His shirt is all twisted, his hair is mussed, and you think you see a bit of dried drool on the corner of his mouth.
Your heart skips a beat, but youâre quickâ too quick, maybe, âI was with Mia.â
He stares, eyes squinted in that sleepy glare people get when they barely notice they exist. His jaw ticks once, he blinks, and he nods like heâs decided heâs not awake enough to interrogate that.
You nod, let the tension slide just a little before you move on.Â
You make it two steps past himâ âSince when do you smoke weed?â
You stop. A ghost of Eddieâs fingers pressed against your sides ripples across your skin. âHuh?â
ââŠYou reek.â
You blink and debate whether or not to respond. You glance at Steve, consider the fact that heâs barely standing straight, and then you realizeâ he probably wonât know if this was real or a dream by the time he wakes up again.
âGoodnight, Steve.â
Your heart is pounding in your ears by the time you shut your bedroom door. You press your back against it, hold your breath, listen for footsteps. Nothing.
Just the hum of your fan, the buzz of leftover weed, the phantom feeling of Eddie all around you, and the one thought left spinning in your headâ
You canât wait to see him again.
There's nobody in the future
So baby let me hand you my love
Oh, there's no step for you to dance to
So slip your hand inside of my glove
- hold me x fleetwood mac
part four.
cutie lil taglist: @kellsck @your-nightmaredoll @hereforshmut @emxxblog @mdurdenpitt @glassbxttless @peculiarwren @aactuaaltraash @daveythorntonslocker @bl1ssfulbaby @strangereads @wdsara48 @cowboylikemunson @mrsjellymunson
ââââ
a/n: WOWOWOW GUYS IM SO SORRY FOR SUCH A LONG CHAPPY OMG!!! i also formerly apologize for how LONG this took me to put out, but i hope i did it justice and you'll forgive me hehe
anyway, as always, thank you for riding along, i hope ur enjoying their gross lovesick era, ily and appreciate any and all forms of feedback <3











